Thursday, November 27, 2008

Gabnet/Mariposa Alliance proudly affirm our participation in the international feminist movement's 16 Days of Activism against Gender Violence campaign. Along with over 2,000 organizations in 154 countries who have participated in this campaign since 1991, Gabnet/Ma-Al launches our own 16 days of activism, beginning on November 25th, the International Day Against Violence Against Women, with a nationwide Speak Out Against Violence, and ending on December 10th, International Human Rights Day.

We in the U.S. are living in a time where words like progress, change and victory are flooding and infused in our collective discourse. We are supposed to believe that we have won the good fight; that there is nothing left to struggle for. We are supposed to believe that individual success is tantamount to the liberation of all.

We, in Gabnet/Mariposa Alliance, know that women around the world, from the United States to the Philippines to Haiti to Africa, still have everything to struggle for. We know that murder is the number one cause of death of pregnant women; that homicide is the number one occupational hazard for women in the US.

We know that somewhere in America a woman is battered, usually by her partner, every 15 seconds. At least one in three women, globally, is sexually abused in her lifetime. In the US, a woman is raped every six minutes. And in armed conflict zones around the world—in Iraq, Darfur, Columbia, South Asia—the rape of women and children is a tool of war, just the same as any gun, bomb or missile.

Over one million women and children are trafficked internationally every year, becoming victims of sexual exploitation, labor exploitation and abuse. And in the US, legislation is being passed to legalize prostitution, an institution that is responsible for the legal rape and degradation of women around the world. This violence cuts across ethnic and economic boundaries and is the result of a patriarchal and imperialist system that values power and money over human rights.

Gabnet/Mariposa Alliance stands in militant solidarity with women around the world as we affirm that women's rights are human rights. Each time a woman is attacked around the world, we hear her voice and we stand with her. We demand an end to all violence against women. --##

Prop K in SF was not legislation to “legalize” anything. It was a ballot initiative proposed by citizen petition to defund enforcement and prosecution of consensual, adult prostitution. Since its opponents couldn’t argue their position on logic or merit, they resorted to lies and distortions to scare enough voters to defeat the proposition.

GABNet NYNJ Photos

About Me

GABRIELA Network is the oldest and largest multiracial grassroots militant feminist and anti-imperialist organization in the United States cultivating Filipina leadership to work against sex and labor trafficking, militarism and globalization’s devastating effects on women of the global south. This blog will attempt to track the many subtle and often violent forms of oppression that women around the world face everyday and how they fight back despite the odds. Gerda Lerner argued that male dominance over women is not "natural" or biological, but the product of an historical development -- thus, its unraveling can also be ended by the historical process....here's to a start.

Apr. 22, 2009, at 8p - Working Theater's Panel "Women's Work?" with GABNet founder Ninotchka Rosca after a performance of EXIT CUCKOO - a new play about a hilarious and profoundly moving collage of mothers, nannies, caretakers and children and the complex chemistry between them.

Apr. 18, 2009, all day - GABNet tables at the NYU's Asian American Student Conference.